Non-Linear Revenue Creating Business Platform for IT ServiceCompanies Using Cloud Computing
By
Prasanta Sinha
Bachelor of TechnologyInstitute Of Technology, Banaras Hindu University, 1998
SUBMITTED TO THE MIT SLOAN SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT INFUFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF
MASSACHUS.ETrS INSTITUTEOF TECHNOLOGY
JUN 14 212
RA RIE
ARCHIVES
MASTER OF SCIENCE IN MANAGEMENT STUDIESAT THE
MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
JUNE 2012
@ 2012 Prasanta Sinha. All Rights Reserved.
The author hereby grants to MIT permission to reproduce and todistribute publicly paper and electronic copies of this thesis document
in whole or in part in any medium now known or hereafter created.
Signature of Author:
May 11, 2012MIT Sloan School of Management
Certified By:Prof. Michael Cusumano
Sloan Management Review Distinguished Professor of ManagementThesis Supervisor
Accepted By:Prof. Michael Cusumano
Sloan Management Review Distinguished Professor of ManagementProgram Director, M.S. in Management Studies Program
MIT Sloan School of Management
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Non-Linear Revenue Creating Business Platform for IT Service CompaniesUsing Cloud Computing
By
Prasanta Sinha
Submitted to the MIT Sloan School of Management on May 11, 2012 inpartial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of
Science in Management Studies
ABSTRACT
The Indian Information Technology (IT) & Business process outsourcing (BPO) companies are goingthrough an inflection point. They have been growing revenue by over 20% on a yearly basis for the lastdecade. This revenue growth has been fueled by a proportionate increase in employee headcount. Theirability to maintain the growth rate is in question, partly due to the difficultly in increasing the headcountand partly due to competition from multinational IT Service companies growing their business in India.In order to continue to grow, the Indian IT companies need to change their business model and look fornonlinear revenue growth, which is independent of the resource deployed or effort spent.Cloud computing provides a new strategic option for growth for the Indian IT-BPO companies. Thisthesis looks into Business Service Platform based on cloud computing and how the IT companies canleverage it to generate nonlinear revenue. It also explores ways to implement the business platform,along with risks and challenges involved. The IT companies would need to change their current sales andmarketing process, along with talent recruitment guidelines and training content in order to successfullyroll out the platforms, on which its future growth is dependent.
Thesis Supervisor: Prof. Michael CusumanoTitle: Sloan Management Review Distinguished Professor of Management
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Table of Contents
CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION .................................................................................................................... 7
CHAPTER 2: INDIAN IT-BPO SERVICE COM PANIES - HEADCOUNT TRAP ................................................ 9
LINEAR GROWTH MODEL & REVENUE/RESOURCE CORRELATION............................................................................11
CHAPTER 3: NON-LINEAR GROW TH MODELS FOR IT-BPO COM PANIES .............................................. 17
CHAPTER 4: CLOUD COM PUTING AND BUSINESS PLATFORM .............................................................. 23
CLOUD COMPUTING: TECHNOLOGY DRIVEN TRANSFORMATION ........................................................................... 23
CHAPTER 5: BUSINESS PLATFORM THROUGH CLOUD............................................................................. 30
OFFERING THROUGH CLOUD BASED BUSINESS SERVICE PLATFORM ...................................................................... 32
CUSTOMERS FOR CLOUD BASED OFFERINGS .................................................................................................... 34
DRIVERS FOR THE SUCCESS OF THE NEW PLATFORM ............................................................................................. 36
BENEFITS FOR THE BUSINESS SERVICE PROVIDER................................................................................................37
CHAPTER 6: IM PLEMENTING BUSINESS PLATFORM............................................................................ 38
KEY DRIVERS FOR A SUSTAINABLE, COST-EFFECTIVE BUSINESS PLATFORM ............................................................. 39
Considerations for Customers .............................................................................................................. 39
Considerations for Business Platform Provider .................................................................................... 40
R ISK & C HA LLENG ES ...................................................................................................................................... 4 8
CHAPTER 7: FUTURE ROADMAP ............................................................................................................. 54
APPENDIX A: QUARTERLY REVENUE AND EMPLOYEE DETAILS ............................................................ 56
APPENDIX B: TCS CURRENT OFFERINGS .............................................................................................. 57
APPENDIX C: INFOSYS CURRENT OFFERINGS ...................................................................................... 59
APPENDIX D: W IPRO'S CURRENT OFFERINGS...................................................................................... 61
REFERENCES & INFORMATION SOURCE .............................................................................................. 63
5
Table of Figures
FIGURE 1: INDIAN IT-BPO SECTOR: REVENUE AGGREGATE & SHARE OF GDP ............................................................................... 9
FIGURE 2: INDIA'S OFFSHORE IT AND BPO EXPORTS ($B) ........................................................................................................ 10
FIGURE 3: INFOSYS REVENUE AND EMPLOYEE COUNT..............................................................................................................11
FIGURE 4: EMPLOYEE COUNT AND REVENUE CORRELATION (INFOSYS)........................................................................................12
FIGURE 5: TCS's REVENUE AND EMPLOYEE COUNT................................................................................................................12
FIGURE 6: EMPLOYEE COUNT AND REVENUE CORRELATION (TCS)......................................................................................... 13
FIGURE 7: W IPRO'S REVENUE AND EMPLOYEE COUNT...........................................................................................................14
FIGURE 8: EMPLOYEE COUNT AND REVENUE CORRELATION (W IPRO).......................................................................................14
FIGURE 9: AVERAGE M ONTHLY REVENUE PER EMPLOYEE ......................................................................................................... 15
FIGURE 10: INFOSYS NET INCOME PER EMPLOYEE ................................................................................................................. 16
FIGURE 11: PROFIT PER TRANSACTION FOR CLOUD BASED PLATFORM ........................................................................................ 19
FIGURE 12: APPROACHES TO VALUE REALIZATION M ETHOD .................................................................................................... 20
FIGURE 13: CLOUD COMPUTING BUSINESS M ODEL...............................................................................................................24
FIGURE 14: IMPORTANT BENEFIT FOR CURRENT AND POTENTIAL CLOUD USERS ........................................................................... 26
FIGURE 15: RAPID GROWTH OF ADP SOFTWARE-AS-A-SERVICE PRODUCTS ................................................................................ 28
FIGURE 16: INDUSTRIES M OST LIKELY IMPACTED BY CLOUD COMPUTING..................................................................................34
FIGURE 17: ClOS' TOP CLOUD CONCERNS IN PERCENT...........................................................................................................35
FIGURE 18: BUSINESS SERVICE PLATFORM DELIVERY M ODEL .................................................................................................... 41
FIGURE 19: TCS ION BUSINESS PLATFORM - SOLUTION STACK ................................................................................................. 45
FIGURE 20: INFOSYS BUSINESS PLATFORM - CORE IDEAS........................................................................................................46
FIGURE 21: W IPRO COMPREHENSIVE CLOUD SERVICES FOR ISV...............................................................................................47
FIGURE 22: LEVEL OF OFFSHORE SERVICE M ATURITY ............................................................................................................ 50
FIGURE 23: KEY IMPERATIVE FOR PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT......................................................................................................51
List of Tables
TABLE 1: COMPARISON CHART -TRADITIONAL VS. BUSINESS PLATFORM ................................................................................... 30
TABLE 2: DIFFERENCE BETWEEN I.T. SERVICE & PLATFORM DEVELOPMENT CHARACTERISTICS......................................................51
TABLE 3: EMPLOYEE AND QUARTERLY REVENUE DETAILS ....................................................................................................... 56
6
Chapter 1: Introduction
The Indian Information Technology (IT) & Business process
outsourcing (BPO) industry is one of the success stories of the modern
times. From a nascent stage in the late 1980s, the industry has grown
tremendous during the 1990s and onwards. It has grown over 100 times in
the last 15 years, contributing significantly to India's economic progress. The
Indian IT-BPO industry is at an inflection point in its evolution as its ability to
maintain the future growth rate is being questioned.
The increase in revenue has been significantly driven by increase in
employee headcount. The revenue model has largely been linear, i.e. for
every percentage point growth in revenue, the employee headcount should
increase by a similar percentage. In order to ensure the continued growth in
double digits as expected by the stock market, the employee strength needs
to grow exponentially.
The major players in the IT-BPO industry, namely, Infosys, Tata
Consulting Services (TCS) and Wipro, have over half a million employees
combined. Their Headcount increase will slow down due to the "law of large
numbers"', impacting the revenue targets.
For the IT-BPO industry to continue its growth story into the next
decade, new business models need to be explored in order to deal with a
rapidly changing marketplace and customer needs. The companies have
been unable to create a non-linear business model, the model that is not
dependent on increase in employee count. They have moved from the model
of staff augmentation to providing end to end consulting services and have
been reluctant to enter into the Product space, either due to lack of skill set
or due to the capital expenditure and the risk involved.
1 Investopedia.com explanation of 'Law Of Large Numbers'http://www. investopedia.com/terms/1iawoflargenumbers. asp# axzz1r9GE6Qn6
7
A new wave of changes in the technology space, from increased
mobility to virtualization and cloud computing, has provided the companies
an opportunity to move away from rigid revenue-employee headcount
correlation and to create a non-linear revenue model.
This thesis examines the Indian IT-BPO companies and finds that the
revenue growth is dependent on the increase of headcount. It focuses on
possible non-linear growth model for these companies. It defines Cloud
Computing and Business Service Platforms that can be created, by focusing
on the offerings from the Indian IT-BPO companies. Finally, it will provide
suggestions for using Business Service Platforms and the risks and
challenges associated with them.
The future growth in the Indian IT-BPO companies will be dependent
on the way they can utilize their existing skillsets (both domain and human
capital) and their ability to successfully implement the new non-linear
growth business model, for which Business Service Platforms through Cloud
Computing is an option.
8
Chapter 2: Indian IT-BPO Service Companies - Headcount Trap
According to NASSCOM 2, a trade association of the Indian IT-BPO
industry, the Indian IT industry has grown from $159M in 1990 to $88.1B in
2011, with export contributing approximately $59B. India is the most
preferred offshore destination. It has been able to innovate, focus on cost
efficiencies, customer values, and managed to scale up by expanding to new
markets.
70 U Export 6% 6.20% 6.40% 7.00%5.50%
60 Domestic -6.00%Source: NASSCOM 4.60% - -~50.
so 47.5s.or/50 4.10% -~5.00%3.60% 40.9
40 -. 4.00%31.7
30 24.2 - 28.8 3.00%
S*13.4 13.2 6 2 2.00%
0 0.00%
FY 2004 FY 2005 FY 2006 FY 2007 FY 2008 FY 2009 FY 2010 FY 2011
Figure 1: Indian IT-BPO Sector: Revenue Aggregate & Share of GDP
In the past 6 years, India's off-shoring industry has grown at a CAGR
of 22% and is expected to grow at a CAGR of ~13-20% through to 2020
depending on the level of initiatives and innovations3.
India's IT services companies have had a golden age. Over the past
decade the industry has achieved growth, as businesses from banks to the
manufacturers in Europe and North America have shifted their routine back-
office tasks and IT functions to India's talented, low-cost workers.
2 http://www.nasscom.org/
3 NASSCOM The IT - BPO Sector in India - Strategic Review 2011
9
F 225-310Source: NASSC0M17
-- -- ----- 59
WithFocusedInitiatives
Innovation
403 47-1I 314 With
-~~ . Crrent1-7 . .. Initiatives
FY 04-05 FY D5-06 FY 06-07 FY 07-08 FY O8-09 FY 09-10 FY to-I I 2020E
Long Term Fundamentals of the India .A.. of--3-to -0%Off-shoring story remain intact CAGR of 13% to 20%
Figure 2: India's offshore IT and BPO exports ($B)
The top three IT services companies-Infosys Technologies, TCS, and
Wipro Technologies-have evolved rapidly into established players, each with
annual revenues of above $6 billion.
Competition is increasing with major Global IT services companies
such as Accenture, HP, and IBM as they enhance their presence in India
through acquisitions and accelerated hiring. The Indian IT industry is also
facing competition from other low wage countries in Eastern Europe,
Philippines and China. Its main market, the industrialized nations, is facing
an economic downturn. These countries are facing high unemployment and
outsourcing has become a major political issue. Getting work visas have
become difficult in most of these countries.
Indian companies themselves are confronting a looming shortage of
skilled workers. Due to increased competition for offshoring contracts as
multi-national companies enter the market, Indian IT-BPO companies are
under tremendous pressure to improve both its workforce and transform
their business model.
10
Linear Growth Model & Revenue/Resource Correlation
From quarter ending 3 1st March 2007 to quarter ending 3 1st Dec 2011,
Infosys's revenue has grown at a CAGR of 16.82% while its employee
headcount has grown at 15.82%. Figure 3 indicates how the revenue and
employee headcount growth for Infosys have been intertwined. If not for the
economic downturn in 2008-2009, these two would virtually overlap.
Infosys's Quarter Ending Revenue and Emplovee Count from 2007 to 2011160 2,000
0- Employee Count -U-Revenue 1,800 C
00
1,600o120
1,400 W
a p1,200 *
800
600 '
40 rrr400C)- 0 Cj 0 )- 0 U 0 a. 0) Li CI U LiL 0 i I< - 0 < 0 < 0 0 0
Figure 3: Infosys Revenue and Ernployee Count
Figure 4 shows the correlation between the revenue and employee
headcount for Infosys during the same period. The "R2 " of the correlation is
a very high 0.946. If the data for the 4 quarters from June 2008 to March
2009 are removed, the correlation increases even further to a value of
almost 0.99.
From quarter ending 3 1st March 2007 to quarter ending 3 1 st Dec 2011,
TCS's revenue has grown at a CAGR of 17.64% while its employee
headcount has grown at a faster rate of 21.64%. Figure 5 indicates the
11
revenue and employee headcount growth for TCS and shows a similar
pattern as one for Infosys.
Correlation between Employee Count and Quarterly Revenue (Infosys)2,000 -1
S 1,800-0
1,600 -
1,400 -
1,200
1,000
y = 12.626x - 74.057R2 = 0.9462
800 + - -r -,- -- -r -- -------- r- .
70 80 90 100 110 120 130 140 150
Employee Count (1000s)
Figure 4: Erployee Count and Revenue Correlation (Infosys)
240
200
160
120
TCS's Quarter Ending Revenue and Employee Count from 2007 to 2011
- Employee Count -l-l Revenue
2,800
2,600
2,4000
2,2002E
2,000
1,800 =
1,600 *
1,400 -
1,200 i
80 1 1 1 r I ---r- 4 1,000N- N- N- D 0000000 (n (n O) a) C 0 00 0 rHi r- V- T-4
- 0 9 OLU a< 0 4 , oo, <-1 7
Figure 5: TCS's Revenue and Enployee Count
12
&r
CD
00
0
LU
+**gap
I
Figure 6 shows the correlation between the revenue and employee
headcount for TCS during the same period. The "R2 " of the correlation is a
very high 0.913. Indifference performance during the economic downturn of
2008-2009 when the revenue growth wasn't able to catch up with the
employee increase led to the lowest "R 2 " among the three major companies.
Correlation between Employee Count and Quaterly Revenue (TCS)2,800
2,600 - y = 9.8589x + 275.3
0 2,400 R2 = 0.9133
2,200
c 2,000
1,800
1,600
1,400
Cr 1,200
1,000
80 100 120 140 160 180 200 220 240 1Employee Count (1000s)
Figure 6: Employee Count and Revenue Correlation (TCS)
From Quarter ending 3 1st March 2007 to quarter ending 3 1 st Dec 2011,
Wipro's revenue has grown at a CAGR of 17.28% while its employee
headcount grew at a modest 15.91%.
Figure 7 indicates the revenue and employee headcount growth for
Wipro and shows similar pattern to its two larger competitors. Figure 8
shows the correlation between the revenue and employee headcount for
Wipro during the same period. The "R2 " of the correlation is a very high
0.986, highest among the three companies. The data shows that Wipro was
able to deal with the economic downturn in a much better way which again
led to a very high "R2 ".
13
160 Wipro's Quarter Ending Revenue and Employee Count from 2007 to 2011
-- Employee Count -i- -Revenue 1 400 0
0 120 1,200
80 W00
o. 600E LU cr
40 - 400r-_ r- r- 00 00 0 00 o') M' c-i (n 0 (D 0 T- - r- 1
1 0 0 0 < 00- - - - - -<1~ u-
Figure 7. Wipro's Revenue and Ernployee Count
Correlation between Employee Count and Quaterly Revenue (Wirpo)1,600
o 1,400 y = 11.982x - 111.12R= 0.9869
Eo 1,200
1,000
t 800
C(600 ......
60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130 140
_ Employee Count (1000s)
Figure 8: Erployee Count and Revenue Correlation (Wipro)
According to Morgan Stanley Research paper "Global IT Services - Per
Employee Metrics are Key to Quality of Growth" 4 , published in September
4 Morgan Stanley Research Paper titles "Global IT Services - Per Employee Metricsare Key to Quality of Growth"http://www.morganstanleychina.com/conferences/apsummit2011/research/30GobaIITServicesp~df
14
2011, Infosys, TCS and Wipro have reported decrease of 13%, 23% and
30%, respectively, in revenue per employee from their historical peak levels
around 2004-2005 to financial year 2011.
Figure 9 shows the average monthly revenue per employee for the
three companies. Increase in billing pressure due to competition and
commoditization of the industry will have a negative impact on revenue per
employee. The companies would need to differentiate themselves in order to
continue their growth.
4 Average Monthly Revenue per Employee-4,8001
4,4 " " Infosys.-- TCS
%. wipro
w 4,000 -"
3,600..
Z> 3,200 -- 1 TF
a C) C:) C) C) 0 ~ 0) 0) 0 -1'4
, , 4 o-4 , o , < 4 , ,
>' I
Figure 9: Average Monthly Revenue per Employee
The industry must become less dependent on time and material based
contracts, which form the traditional relationship of labor arbitrage.
Figure 10 show that Infosys's net income per employee has gradually
declining over the last decade, despite the best effort of the company to
15
control cost. The net income per employee has fallen by 25% from 2002 to
20115.
- -1 -1 Nii a=Net Income per Em ployee - Y/Y Change
E
;12,000
M
C1-0
LL U-
0
U- IL
0
LL
15%
5 -16
10%
15%
U-
Figure 10: Infosys Net Income per Employee
The companies should focus their investment and innovation efforts in
developing the Value Realization (VR) method in order to generate revenue
from an outcome-based service. Sustainable development, enterprise
mobility, and Cloud offerings through innovative business models can help
create a "non-linear" revenue growth model.
5 Morgan Stanley Research Paper titles "Global IT Services - Per Employee Metricsare Key to Quality of Growth"http://www.morganstanleychina.com/conferences/apsummit2011/research/30GlobalITServicgspdf
16
Chapter 3: Non-linear Growth Models for IT-BPO Companies
The Indian software industry needs to move away from delivering on
cost arbitrage to its customers and to delivering business values and
outcomes to them, by exploring different avenues of non-linearity.
Non-linear model can be achieved through multiple methods. It can be
done by creating Intellectual Property (IP), products, and platforms or by
exploring different pricing mechanisms. While increasing effort on branding
can have incremental effect, Merger & Acquisitions (M&A) or combining
business service through the cloud computing would provide a disruptive
model for non-linear revenue.
The top 3 Indian IT-BPO companies have around half million
employees. In order to generate a growth rate of 20%, the employee count
would also increase in a similar proportion, reaching over a million within the
next four years. Management of a large workforce would bring in additional
challenges, such as diverting company's focus from maintaining revenue
growth.
A move to non-linearity is necessary in order to sustain the current
growth trajectory. A few primary models through which IT-BPO companies
can redefine their services in their endeavor to deliver value to clients and
help move to nonlinear revenue creation are discussed below.
* Intellectual Property:
Indian software product companies have been relegated to the
background by their services counterpart. The Indian software product
industry has grown from just over hundred million dollar in the year 2000 to
17
about USD 2 billion in 2011. Further, it is expected to reach 9.5-12 Billion
USD by 20156
The large Indian IT major companies have been developing and
acquiring IPs in the areas of banking, financial services and insurance
segment. It has been observed that companies focusing on IP/products
generally demonstrate higher revenue growth with a significantly lower
employee growth rate.
Cloud Computing
Industry research estimates double digits growth of Cloud related
spending over next several years. At present most Indian IT companies are
engaged in third-party implementations and cloud migration services, which
are not different from their traditional outsourcing model.
The ability to cater to multiple customers through a single delivery
platform makes Cloud an attractive investment for the service providers in
the long term. Companies need to make initial investments, in creating the
platforms along with increased efforts in sales and marketing.
As shown in the Figure 11 7, the margin could be low or even negative
in the initial years, due to relatively high sales and marketing cost, high
customer acquisition costs, slow customer acquisition, and customer churn.
Companies' ability to show case business values would make it attractive to
customers to join the platform.
After the initial years of investment, margins would improve as
revenue crosses a threshold. It will also increase the customer stickiness and
an annuity of predictable subscription services.
6 Nasscom -Zinnov study on India Software Product Business, August, 20087 JP Morgan, India IT Services, 15 December 2010
18
700 0 ost per transaction80.060.0
40.0
20 . Revenmepier transaction0.0
(20.01(40.0)
{60.O) Pofit per transaction
Figure 11: Profit per Transaction for Cloud Based Platform
0 Platform BPO
Indian IT-BPO companies can move to Platform based BPO solutions
by providing technology, consulting and service based on transaction and
process-centric delivery model. They can offer an entire suite of services
over a common business platform, providing them the ability to easily scale
up, optimize costs, and improve process performance for their clients.
Similar to Cloud Computing option, platform BPO would impact the
operating margin initially but with an increased customer base, it also
provides an opportunity for rapid revenue growth. The platform BPO allows
service providers to de-linearize growth through standardization and large-
scale productivity payoffs.
. Non-linear Pricing Models
Time and Material (T&M) and Fixed Price (FP) models are linked to
headcount and effort spent. Non-linear pricing models on the other hand,
link revenue to business outcomes or usage, paving a way to non-linear
revenue.
19
Outcome based models cover service offerings like products,
consulting, infrastructure management and customization. Non-linear pricing
models result in higher revenue productivity per employee and thus,
improved margins for companies.
* Value Realization Method
Software is an investment that cannot be measured in terms of cost
until it is successfully deployed and used.
Tactical CommodityApp roach
Cost of SoftwareMinimal Support
Services Separate
Value: Cheapest Price
Strategic RelationshipApproach
Cost of SoftwareAmount Deployed
Invest in Support andServices
Value Deployedversus Cost
Value: Standardizationof Software
Value: Strategic Platformsand Standards
Value: Bulk and ForwardPurchasing Prices
Strategic BusinessValue Approach
Cost of SoftwareAmount Deployed
Investment in Support andServices
Business Project Returns
Value as per StrategicRelationship Approach
PLUSValue: Impact of Project
on Business
Figure 12: Approaches to Value Realization Method
20
LUM
LIJ
U.0U)
The typical approach to measure the value from software is shown in
figure 128. The strategic business value approach has a greater success in
obtaining positive outcome from software as the customer achieves greater
value.
The Indian IT companies should be able to quantify the value realized.
They should be able to structure the engagement by targeting a percentage
of the value generated. The upfront cost for creating and implementing the
software/project can be shared between the customer and the vendor.
Although there is an additional risk undertaken by the IT companies,
the upside in revenue generated from successfully implementing is very
large. Moreover, the final revenue is not related to the effort spent but on
the value derived for the customer.
* Branding
A strong brand identity by showcasing critical elements that may
attract customer will enable the IT companies to increase their brand
perception, augment profitability and ultimately contribute in their nonlinear
growth strategy.
A comprehensive, integrated brand strategy is needed to ensure
success in the marketplace. Companies should focus on developing a solid
business model that delivers on the brand promises and brand values. It will
be effective when it is perceived to offer a real benefit for its customer.
* Mergers and Acquisitions
M&A has been a strategic growth engine for firms, helping them take
the inorganic route for non-linear growth. The big 3 Indian IT-BPO
8 IBM Redbook - Value Realization from Efficient Software Deployment
21
companies have over $6B in cash reserve on their balance sheet. The
current economic conditions are conducive for consolidation as small and
mid-sized players are struggling for sustenance.
The companies can look into M&A for IP and technology assets,
enterprise mobility, ERP Platforms, niche capabilities for capturing the
complete Value Chain.
22
Chapter 4: Cloud Computing and Business Platform
Cloud Cornputing: Technology Driven Transformation
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) defines
Cloud Computing9 as "a model for enabling ubiquitous, convenient, on-
demand network access to a shared pool of configurable computing
resources (e.g., networks, servers, storage, applications, and services) that
can be rapidly provisioned and released with minimal management effort or
service provider interaction".
The Essential Characteristics of Cloud are
* On-demand self-service
" Broad network access
" Resource pooling
. Rapid elasticity
* Measured service
The deployment models for the Cloud are
" Private
" Community
. Public
" Hybrid
The figure 1310 shows the three Cloud Computing delivery models
which are distinguished based on the level of abstractions they export to the
Cloud users (or programmers) and the level of computing resource
management (flexibility) they offer.
9 The NIST Definition of Cloud Computing - NIST Special Publication 800-145
http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/nistpubs/800-145/SP800-145.pdf
10 TCS Cloud Taxonomy
23
3.2 Applications
3.1 DomainComponents
SaaS, Software-and-service, IT-as-a-Service, Platform-and-Service,Horizontal (Payroll, Accounting, Collaboration,...) vs Vertical (InventoryManagement, Loyalty Management, ...),
Widgets, Mashups, Components, Services,Domain-specific environments
Software Engineering (Architecture, Design, Development, Build, Test,Release), Domain-agnostic Platforms, Analytics, Workflow, Scheduler,..,
Programming, File/DB, Integration and Messaging, Identity andSecurity, Management, Measurement, Data Consistency, Transactions,Autonomic/Self-healing capability, Clustering, Scalability/Elasticity,Multi-tenancy, Load-balancing,
Virtualization, Virtual OS, Utility, Compute, Data Grid, Appliances
Processor Storage, Memory, Network,.
Figure 13: Cloud Computing Business Model
The IaaS layer contains the following sub-layers:
* Physical Infrastructure - This addresses the elements of physical
infrastructure such as processors, storage, memory, network and devices.
" Logical Infrastructure - This is the backbone for Cloud infrastructure.
Areas to address include techniques for virtualization such as hypervisors,
virtual operating systems, and other logical elements such as utility
computing and compute- grids.
The PaaS layer contains the following sub-layers, which enable the
building of true Cloud applications:
. Abstractions - Building a Cloud application requires a review of almost
every computing paradigm to devise tools and techniques for exploiting
24
3.0Software-
as-a-Service
$1
)
the Cloud infrastructure. This sub-layer also provides APIs to the higher
layers to exploit the infrastructure. Some of the areas to address will
include programming techniques, file system, integration patterns,
techniques for data consistency, and transactions.
Enablers and Frameworks - These address the domain-independent tools
and techniques for building applications in the Cloud. These are reusable
components for higher level layers. Some of the areas to address will be
Software Development Lifecycle tools, domain-agnostic platforms, and
common IT applications such as workflows.
The SaaS layer contains the following sub-layers and addresses the
unique needs of the customers by providing domain-specific software as a
service. This contains the following sub-layers:
* Domain Components - These address the domain-specific tools and
techniques for building applications on a Cloud. These are reusable
business components. Areas to address will include mashups, widgets,
business services, domain-specific platforms such as mobile application
platforms, and so on.
. Applications - This sub-layer addresses various application offerings,
horizontal and domain applications that can be provided in a SaaS mode.
This layer also provides the unique services needed to bring out the
true value of Cloud Computing to enterprises. It also looks at the various
service offerings provided by the IT vendors, including advisory (consulting),
migration, application development, and deployment.
It will encompass business concerns of consumers and providers,
including the type of Cloud (private or public or hybrid or federated),
25
innovative pricing models, costing models, and innovative strategic
platforms.
Cloud Computing can make a real difference for businesses by
increasing productivity, reducing costs and enabling IT staff to focus on line
of business activities rather than supporting hardware and operating
systems. For 2010" as well as 201112, Gartner Research has identified Cloud
Computing as the topmost technology in its annual list of top 10 strategic
technology areas.
According to the 2009 research program conducted by Accenture and
the World Economic Forum as shown in figure 14, cloud computing has the
potential to benefit organizations, whole industries, and even entire
economies by:
Enab~e new serIces/prcuz 86%
C0: aboation/informadon 1snaning
Reduce Costs 71
ep you focus on core 57%
Mitgaze business risk 50%
% of Users Who Rated 4 or 5(1 = not imoottant, 5 = very impodant)
Figure 14: Important Benefit for Current and Potential Cloud Users
" Gartner Identifies the Top 10 Strategic Technologies for 2010 - Gartner PressRelease dated 20-Oct-2009 -http://www.gartner.com/it/page.jsp?id=1210613
12 Gartner Identifies the Top 10 Strategic Technologies for 2011 - Gartner PressRelease dated 19-Oct-2010 - http://www.gartner.com/it/page.jsp?id=1454221
26
" Accelerating the creation of new products and services, by helping
companies collaborate more effectively and through access to more
powerful and economical computer resources
" Increasing the ability to mine data for important trend information, such
as customers' changing needs and competitors' moves in the marketplace
* Providing a level playing field to all companies by giving them access to
information technology that previously was affordable to only the largest
of the companies
* Providing an ability to emerging nations to leapfrog to higher levels of
technological development by more immediate and affordable access
PwC (earlier called PricewaterhouseCoopers) in an article "The cloud
you don't know: an engine of new business growth' 3" for its quarterly
journal "Technology forecast" in 2010 says that "Cloud computing can unlock
latent value of an organization's key internal capabilities and processes by
enabling the extensible enterprise".
The same article provides examples of a few companies such as
LiveOps14 , Zuora15 and ADP16. It says that LiveOps has built cloud based
customer support process business platform. The LiveOps's On-Demand
13 The cloud you don't know: An engine for new business growthhttp)://www.pwc.com/us/en/technology-forecast/2010/issue4/features/business-
growth-pg.ihtml" Company Website - http://wwwliveops.com/'s Company Website - http://zuora.com/16 Company Website - http://www.adp.com/
27
Contact Center Platform' 7 enables enterprises to deploy, on demand, an
instantly scalable contact center solution using a pay-per-use model.
Zuora has created a cloud based billing system, which allows rapid
scaling of billing operations via its Z-Billing product' 8 .
ADP has developed various business platforms, taking advantage of
the cloud's ability to integrate faster and at lower cost. ADP's customers who
require the functionality offered by different platforms can access them in a
pre-integrated way.
Pre-2000
0 Internet Hosted products* Service Bureau
Zeroregistered
usersA
2001-2004 2004-2006
2.5 millionregisterelA1.
users
I millionregistered
usesrlj
2007-2010
9.8 milionregistered
users
Figure 15: Rapid Growth of ADP Software-as-a-Service Products
17 LiveOps On Demand Contact Center Platform - http://www.Iiveops.com/on-demand-contact-center/contact-center-platform. html
18 Zuora's Z-Billing product - http://www.zuora.com/how-it-works/subscription-billing.html
28
ADP developed a platform and integrated it with other cloud based
providers. It integrated functionalities it didn't have, using cloud computing,
to bring together a richer set of end-to-end services through partnership and
integration with other cloud service providers.
The figure 15 shows the successful adaptation of Cloud and Rapid
Growth of ADP Software-as-a-Service products, helping it increase
registered users from 2.5 million to 10 million in nearly 10 years from 2000
to 201019.
The ability of Cloud computing to increase collaboration and
integration, both within and with external source, creates a platform more
robust compared to simple data exchange. ADP has leveraged its ability to
integrate rapidly with other cloud service providers, extending its value
proposition by combining its own capabilities with those in its ecosystem,
creating wins for itself, its collaborators, and its customers.
The collaboration in the ecosystem is not a new concept. Cloud
computing technologies have helped in lowering the cost of deeper
collaborations and in accelerating adoption.
The Indian IT-BPO companies are very bullish about the capability of
cloud computing. TCS believes that Cloud Computing is very attractive to the
Enterprise IT world and IT service providers, due to the multiple
opportunities around innovative business models20 . TCS considers that the
business models around cloud computing will prove to be potentially
disruptive.
19 Automatic Data Processing, Inc. Annual Financial Analyst Conference February 18,2010 http://www.investquest.com/ig/a/adp/main/Feb20l0ADPFinacialAnalystConf Final.pdf
20 Dr. Gautam Shroff, Dr. Harrick Vin, Vijayalakshmi Gopal, V. Srinivasa Raghavan,Vinay Kulkarni - TCS's Service Offerings in Cloud Computinghttp://www.tcs.com/SiteCollectionDocuments/White/o20Papers/Innovation Brochure TCSService Offering Cloud Computinq 09 2009.pdf
29
Chapter 5: Business Platform through Cloud
Cloud computing creates a new strategic option of growth for the
Indian IT-BPO companies. It provides an opportunity for both internal effort
and external partnership by offering business services as cloud services.
Network partners will help grow the business by complimenting the cloud
services at minimal marginal cost.
The business service on cloud is a paradigm shift from the earlier slow,
one-off partnership and customer acquisition processes in the pre-cloud era
to the scalable partnership, service delivery and customer service offering
made possible by the cloud.
The Business Service Platform provides a complete business solution
on the cloud by packaging a technology platform with domain applications. It
can be used for domains such as Insurance Policy Administration, Claims
Processing, Human Resource, Point of Sale, etc.
A platform implementer provides software licensing, hosting,
implementation, application support, and personnel required for running the
process operations while the usage is mainly pay-per-use mode. It helps
move the service delivery from being people-centric to platform-centric.
The table 1 provides a comparison of the traditional service model and
cloud based business service platform model.
Table 1: Comparison Chart - Traditional vs. Business Platform
Parameter Traditional Platform
Scope Business process (Only the Business Process including
business part) combining data/Information
(Includes both Technology
along with Business)
30
Pricing Fixed price contract Or Time Transaction based pricing
and Material (Price not model (Pay-per-use)
related to customer's
business cycle)
Scalability Low as specific/customized Very High. Same platform can
for each client be used for multiple clients
There is an opportunity to build software-based business services
platform in the cloud and then create an ecosystem with the help of other
cloud-based providers. Cloud based business service can scale revenue
much faster and at lower cost than traditional approaches.
The challenge is to create an adaptable and modular business service
to enable deeper process integration with partners and collaborators.
Adaptable service should support the broadest range of use cases, attracting
broadest set of ecosystem partners and a bigger revenue stream. The
service should be modular and standardized with better interfaces for
integration with other business platforms. The business service should be
versatile because of the potential for use in multiple contexts.
The cloud based business service will ideally never be used as a
standalone application. It will either be shared or integrated with other cloud
based process or would be used as an extensible part of enterprise IT
system of the customer. In order to drive the best out of the business
service platform, human intervention should be more of an exception.
The road to a cloud platform will require significant changes in the
internal mindset. From a service based organization to a platform based,
which is a combination of product and services will require different
31
performance measures. The skillsets would need to be aligned, be it of the
sales, marketing or the technology team.
Moreover, the financial return will be slow and often painful. The
operating margin would be depressed in the initial stage due to relatively
high sales and marketing cost, high customer acquisition costs, slow
customer acquisition and customer churn.
An example is Salesforce.com 2 1 which has current gross margins of
over 80 percent22 , although it has a very low operating margin due to high
sales and marketing cost. However, it is expected that after the initial years
of investment lasting between 1 to 3 years, margins are likely to be
phenomenal once revenue crosses a threshold.
The ability to cater to multiple customers through a business service
platform through Cloud makes an attractive investment for the service
providers in the long term. The fixed cost incurred in creating and delivering
services is recovered with an increase in customer base, resulting in higher
margins over long term. The economies of scale are derived from usage
across multiple customers.
Offering through Cloud Based Business Service Platform
The Business Service Platform can provide solution to following major
segments
* Finance & Accounting
The platform will help customer streamline their finance and
accounting processes, and decrease the costs of implementing, maintaining
and upgrading finance applications.
21 Salesforce.com http://www.salesforce.com/22 Salesforce.com Annual report 2011
32
Key finance and accounting processes should be identified that can be
outsourced. While transactional processes such as accounts payable,
accounts receivable, billing, etc. are obvious choice, with improvements in
capabilities, higher end value services such as statutory/regulatory
accounting, financial reporting and tax can also be targeted.
. Human Resources
The platform will offer standardized global HR outsourcing services
through operational expertise gained through various HR outsourcing
projects.
Some of the key services provided by the Platform are: Resourcing
Services, Workforce Management, Talent Management Services, and
Compensation & Benefits etc.
* Analytics / Business Intelligence
The platform should focus on areas such as analytics and business
intelligence for business service platform offering. The ability of cloud
computing to provide scalable computing needs should be utilized in the
areas of Customer Analytics, Supply Chain Analytics, Risk Analytics, and
Marketing Analytics etc.
* Procurement
Procurement activities relating to sourcing and supplier management,
which help reduce transaction cost of purchasing goods and related services
is another important business service which can be offered through the
platform.
33
Customers for Cloud Based Offerings
According to the 2009 research program, conducted by Accenture and
the World Economic Forum 2 3, industries most likely impacted by cloud
computing based on the respondents who answered 5, 4 or 3 is shown (from
left to right) in the figure 16.
I~
Educat2
Manufacturing
0% 10% 20% 3% 4 50 0% 70 80%
% of Respord sWho Answreod 5,4or 3
agh N 4Medumr gh 3-Mochate
Figure 16: Industries Most Likely Impacted by Cloud Computing
Companies are likely to turn to their existing IT Service advisors to
help them navigate cloud projects and these providers should pitch with
their platform offerings. The IT services industry has proved itself earlier,
which gives them more credibility to fill the trusted advisor role. Further,
through their existing relationships, many IT services companies have also
23 World Economic Forum Report (2009) -http://www3.weforum.orq/docs/WEF ITTC FutureCloudComputinq Report 2010.pdf
34
demonstrated their abilities to address many of the top concerns that CIOs
have about the cloud, which are shown in the figure 1724 (in order of largest
concern, 2nd concern & 3 rd concern in the figure below)
Data security
Cost- uce iavn i gs
LDSS Of ocontrOujgrades, timing of backups, etc)
Regulatoryvor Compliahnce
(SLA requireentsE
Data potgitownshipW 1
a L oenne pro idr s.
* L eset CCem n c
Figure 17: CIOs' Top Cloud Concerns in Percent
Another important customer segment to focus is the Small and
Medium Businesses (SMB) enterprise. It is a burgeoning economic segment
that is capable of driving economic growth in its own right. In Germany 25 ,
24 Morgan Stanley Research (May 2011) - Cloud Computing Takes off25 TCS whitepaper: IT-as-a-Service for Small and Medium Businesses
35
Software companosty
46% of the GDP is contributed by SMBs. In India, while the contribution of
SMBs to exports is 46%, the sophistication of IT in Indian SMBs is poor.
The major Indian IT-BPO companies have been working with mainly
Fortune 1000 companies, basically ignoring the SMB sector. It is mainly due
to the marketing and sales effort, leading to higher overhead cost and thus,
decreasing in operating margins. It is also due to the fact that the products
and services that have traditionally served large enterprises cannot be
applied to a SMB. Products need to be rebuilt, and service models need to be
configured to address the characteristic requirement of this segment.
In the SMB sector, capital investment in IT is unplanned and tends to
be deferred. Coupled with the fact that an IT project could take several
months to go-live and could fail too, upfront IT investment is rightly seen as
risky for these companies, who perennially struggle for working capital.
The Business Service Platform can provide an opportunity to IT-BPO
companies to target the long tail of the market. With minimum upfront
investment required from the SMB companies and pay-per-use revenue
model, the SMB segment would be eagerly willing to join the platform.
Moreover, due to the ability to serve multiple customers through the
platform, the provider will be able to share the resources, helping them
increase profitability.
Drivers for the Success of the New Platform
By adapting the business service platform, prospective customer will
be able to offset economic uncertainty by avoiding large investments. The
pricing model would be based on actual usage on monthly/quarterly basis,
providing a flexible and scalable model.
Customers would free up capital to innovate and scale up/down based
on market needs. The service provider would execute, maintain and take
care of upgrade, thus, releasing the client's resources. The customer would
36
be able to focus on their core competencies and move non-core
functions/processes to 3rd party and gain cost advantage due to economy of
scale on the vendor side.
As the vendor would be providing the service to multiple customers, it
is expected that the processes would follow industry standards. The
customer can use the same platform across businesses and geographies,
helping the company move to a common process, decreasing complexity and
improving efficiency in their operations.
Business platform through cloud provides an ability to connect to other
cloud business services through the same platform. This reduces
implementation and business cycle time by incorporating configurable plug-
in templates and shared synergies through a multi-client system
architecture.
With acceptance of Cloud Computing, the spending priorities will shift
away from some traditional services, leading to an increase in demand for
services in aggregate.
Benefits for the Business Service Provider
A Business Service Platform showcases the service provider's expertise
and contributes to its brand image. Branding can act as a pull for the client
to push through implementation oriented work. It also provides credibility to
provider's business domain expertise in a highly competitive environment.
The platform helps increase profits by charging a premium for the
value created and the risks undertaken. As the same platform will host
multiple customers, revenue generation is expected to be based on service
provided to customer and not on the employees assigned, helping de-
linearize growth through standardization and large-scale productivity
payoffs.
37
Chapter 6: Implementing Business Platform
The Indian IT-BPO companies provide IT related services to their
customers. Creating, implementing and operating would bring in a new set
of challenges for these companies. Their success will define the future
trajectory of these companies, as it provides them with an opportunity to
move to a non-linear revenue model.
The Business Platform can be implemented in multiple business areas
but a company can't focus everywhere at once. The starting point would be
finding a customer or a business partner who is ready to become the user of
the platform. Although for any new enterprise or any new offerings, it is of
paramount importance to find the first customer, the inability to find the first
customer should not be the end of the story. The company can research the
market, talk to its multiple customers and gauge the gap in the market on
the area it can focus. It should also look within the organization to
understand its competencies and decide on the business areas it can provide
a complete service offering.
The provider should then try to understand the business requirement
and create an implementation roadmap. In order to serve multiple
customers, the model requires standardizing the functionalities and finding
opportunities to rationalize the process to industry standards and best
practices. The applications must be designed to provide specific flexibilities.
The service provider would need to support the customer to configure these
business processes and to make them as per the organization's requirement.
An area of concern for customer would be the security of their data
that resides in remote datacenters owned by the service provider. The
Business Platform must comply with and implement a comprehensive and
foolproof security policy that maintains data privacy and preserves data
integrity in managed services models. The platform should be designed to
38
provide business continuity when faced with an unforeseen event such as a
natural disaster through data replication in real time and continuous
operations from an alternate data center.
Key Drivers for a Sustainable, Cost-Effective Business Platform
Under the Business Platform umbrella, there is a fundamental change
in software business paradigm, spanning from customer relations to revenue
recognition to rollouts. The customer and service partner need to understand
the new set of fundamentals in order to be successful in driving a cost-
effective Model.
Considerations for Customers
Companies should recognize a partner with the right set of skills and
domain expertise for using a Business Platform. The partner should be
willing to understand the customer's business dynamics, and offer the right
mix of functionality and features. It can then build additional value around it
with complementary features or components. It can be provided through
partnerships with other providers to deliver complex integration, data
migration, and on-demand infrastructure requirements of the customer.
The true value proposition to business platform should employ a
subscription/utility pricing model rather than term licensing. This offers
immediate value to customers through "pay as you go" pricing models. The
customers should not be required to make a huge financial commitment up
front.
The contract should be negotiated to avoid unexpected costs. Any
hidden costs should be understood to negotiate deals with predictable
costing terms. The right contractual terms with the business platform
provider should be established focusing on the key contractual elements
listed below.
. Security, data protection provisions, and regulatory compliance
39
* Performance, availability, and uptime service-levels agreements (SLAs)
* Business viability
. Integration with legacy business applications
* Disaster recovery provisions
* Exit clauses
Adequate security safeguards are of paramount importance to
customers when applications and underlying data are hosted by Business
Platform provider. Customers need to ensure that critical data is protected
from unauthorized access/use, and that third-party data hosting center
provision world-class security at every level -physical, personnel, network,
application, and data security (including authentication, encryption, firewall,
and password technologies). A provision in the contract can be added to
certify the security compliance or to audit the provider for security
compliance and data protection laws.
The Business Platform should be flexible to accommodate the dynamic
nature of business requirements and reduce recurring cost to clearly
demonstrate advantage in terms of lower total cost of ownership (TCO).
Considerations for Business Platform Provider
A delivery model for Business Service Platform created to provide
business process solution to multiple customers, while increasing the
revenue productivity of the provider, is shown in the figure 18.
The barometer to high customer satisfaction is a rich and unique user
experience, which demands a distinct look and feel that is consistent with
the branding needs of the organization.
40
Lower Total Cost of Ownershipby shifting ownershipLower Capital & Operating cost
- Rapid Deployment cyclesGreater Flexibility & Ease ofuse
- Integrated Service deliveryModel and quick rollouts
- Multi-tenancy basedarchitecture
- Democratized configuration
U- Reduce Time-to-market cycle
and better ROI (Return OnInvestment)
- Development-as-a-Service- Centralized authentication
system
- Reduced business risk- Reduce IT complexity
U
- Pricing based on usageUptime as a key factor
Figure 18: Business Service Platforr Delivery Model
Availability of business applications and underlying systems helps in
delivering unique user experience. In the event that applications are
unavailable to business users, their Business-as-Usual (BAU) is impacted,
which in turn impacts their SLAs. On-demand platform demands highest
level of service.
The factors contributing to high level of customer satisfaction are
. Deliver rich end-user experience (understand end-user metrics)
* Set up a cost-effective, responsive 24/7, multi-tiered support
* Deploy skilled vendor support staff with domain-level expertise and
problem-resolution skills
. Ensure secure access and data privacy
* Address availability and manageability requirements
41
Ong *Rana AV
" Realize the right balance of customization v/s configuration provisions
. Optimize performance and manage scale
The Business Platform provider needs to set the right expectations at
the very onset of the engagement, through a good understanding of the
application portfolio. Transparency helps build the level of trust between the
customer and the provider.
The Business Platform provider should focus on core delivery solutions
by recognizing the fact that platform is only a delivery mechanism that
serves as a means to the end. Core products or services should be
sufficiently functional so as to obtain repeat business. The customer expects
right mix of features and functionalities.
The platform should scale up to handle increased customer demand
and ensure customer satisfaction. It should assume responsibility of
ensuring adequate performance and availability of these applications.
The desired level of customization and configurability needs to be
ensured by the provider. This can be done by carefully identifying and
assessing the scope of customization (how much and when) in conjunction
with time and resource constraints.
A flexible outcome pricing models should be provided to the customer.
The pricing can be multi-tiered in order to attract multiple customers. Low
cost pricing should not cannibalize higher cost pricing, which has higher
margin to the provider.
The Business Service provider should explore all possible on-demand
security solutions to safeguard each customer's vital data and information. It
should ensure that customer data is separated and secured.
Control application access (who can access the tenant information and
where is the end user information stored and maintained) and Control role-
42
based access (who can access which features within an application) are two
important perspectives which should be adhered to.
The Business Platform should also provide
" Scalable and robust multi-tenant architecture based on Service-oriented
architecture (SOA) principles
" Standard-based solutions with integration flexibility or provisions
" Ability to support degrees of configurability and an adequate level of
customization - collect, collate and configure meta-data at each level
* Data security - fine-grained role-based access
* Data isolation - Keeping customer/vendor data separated and secured
* Adherence to regulatory compliance and security standards
In a highly competitive and turbulent environment/market, the time to
market and reliability are critical differentiators. The provider should forge
strategic alliances with industry leading product vendors and solution
providers.
Multi-tenancy efficient architecture along with enterprise proven on-
demand applications is an important requirement for Business Service
Platform. This requires several technical challenges to be addressed, by
following which service providers can build and deploy scalable,
customizable, manageable, and cost-effective multi-tenant solutions.
Multi-tenancy is ultimately a means of achieving cost efficiency, given
that it is primarily intended to reduce the number of deployed instances and
to align the necessary schema. Multi-tenancy ensures that it is cheaper and
easier to manage a deployed instance and also minimizes the number of
administrators required for the deployment. An effective multi-tenant
architecture is driven by the following factors:
. The type of customers
" Volume of data per tenant
43
" Projected volume of transactions per tenant
" Types of transactions that the tenants will generate (% Read vs. %Write)
* Customer-specific security requirements (data isolation)
* Business Intelligence and reporting model
* Tenant-pricing model and uptime SLAs
There would be paradigm shift in the way software products or
services are sold in the market, from the sale of product/service to
continuous delivery and deployment model. The provider should implement
meaningful SLAs to measure quality of service with un-interrupted usage.
The platform should support business needs by simplifying business
processes and functions at each layer of the infrastructure and business
applications.
TCS has created a business platform for SMBs through cloud 26 called
"iON". It is likely to use the consulting and operational takeaways from its
cloud initiative for small and medium businesses in India to roll out the
offering for its global clients, thus creating a new revenue line for its
services. This new platform could drive an improvement in revenue and EBIT
per employee for the company as it gains scale over the coming years. It
currently has more than 150 customers and looks to achieve revenues of $1
billion within five years
TCS has created dedicated business unit to address the specific needs
of Small and Medium business customer segment. Its solutions consist of
seven layers of fully integrated services, proving hardware, network, office &
business application along with core application for the customer. It also
provides a business analytics solution.
26 TCS's Service Offerings in Cloud Computinghttp://www.tcs.com/SiteCollectionDocuments/White/20Papers/Innovation Brochure
TCS Service OfferingaCloud Computing 09 2009.pdf
44
The detail about TCS iON platform is provided in Appendix B. The
complete solution offering is shown in the figure 19.
Common Business Applications Layer
Common Office A pplications Layer
Software Solution Network~oltztlon Hardware Solution
Figure 19: TCS ION Business Platform - Solution Stack
Infosys is using the cloud to enhance its non-linear revenue initiatives,
which will help to differentiate its consulting services. Its software as a
service platform has also helped its banking product - Finacle - to increase
revenues 2 7 (47% year over year in fiscal year 2011) and to expand its
customer base by reducing the infrastructure requirements for its clients.
27 Morgan Stanley Research (May 2011) - Cloud Computing Takes off
45
Vertical Core A pplications Layer
Maufctr g etil Welns Edcatio Restarn Text Prfhevie
EMMA=
"agiSteoftvr
Internally, its projects have already adopted the internal enterprise
cloud that can host over 3,000 virtual machines and it maintains a 90%
utilization of the virtual instances.
Infosys prefers to develop platforms for clients with existing needs.
The company also holds platform roll-outs until clients have been won for its
existing platforms in a given segment.
Infosys positions itself as a cloud ecosystem integrator by providing
comprehensive service for the cloud through industry leading services and
ecosystem partnership.
The portfolio2 8 shown in figure 20 consists of
* Offering business solution to clients business problems
. Enhancing power by domain expertise, IP and Cloud Computing
* Providing measureable business outcomes
Our BusinessSolution
Powered By
Figure 20 Infosy s Platfor - Core Ideas
Infosys divides its cloud offering into two categories
28 http://wvvw. infosvs.com/cloud/offerinas/services-in-cloud/Paaes/index.asox
46
" Services for the Cloud 29
" Services in the Cloud3 0
"Services for the Cloud" addresses various aspects of Cloud adoption.
It provides companies with business agility while reducing total cost of
ownership. "Services in the Cloud" creates three kinds of platforms, namely
functional platform, vertical platforms and bridge platforms.
The details about Infosys Cloud offering is provided in Appendix C
Wipro provides its clients a portfolio of industry-specific business
process solutions delivered as cloud services31 . They are driven by Wipro's
replicable cloud solutions and frameworks conceptualized and developed by
a strong R&D backbone consisting of over 20 cloud centers of excellence.
These has been developed through a strong partner ecosystem
comprising of global Cloud solution/service providers like Microsoft, Cisco,
EMC, BMC, Amazon, SFDC, Netsuite, SAP, Oracle and Redhat.
SaaS Siaas
Operations Consulting& Strategy
SaasEnablement
Figure 21: Wipro Comprehensive Cloud Services for ISV
29 http://www.infosys.com/cloud/offerings/Pages/details.aspx30 http://www.infosys.com/cloud/offerings/services-in-cloud/Pages/details.aspx3 http: //www.wipro.com/services/cloud -services/cloud-services-why-wipro.aspx
47
Wipro has also launched the "Comprehensive Cloud Services for
ISVs",32 focusing on enabling the Independent Software Vendors (ISVs) to
transform their current product portfolio into SaaS business model and
achieve faster time to market as shown in the figure 21.
The details about Wipro Cloud offering is provided in Appendix D
Risk & Challenges
All business opportunities come with risks attached to it. The risks
associated with Cloud Computing can be divided into two part, business risk
and technology risk
* Business Risks
Governance: Without oversight, it is unable to create and implement
future roadmap. Ability to successfully manage the ecosystem requires a
robust governance model.
Vendor Alignment: Customers need to endure that the provider is
operating at a profit. The cost of moving from one service platform on cloud
to another can be catastrophic. Similarly, like in any business, ability of its
vendors to make regular payment is important.
Regulatory: Compliance with the myriad of rules including SOX
(Sarbanes-Oxley Act), HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act), PCI (Payment card industry) and others while taking
advantage of the economic model
. Technology Risks
32 Wipro Comprehensive Cloud Services for ISVs-http://www.wipro.com/industries/computer-software-solutions/wipro-comprehensive-cloud-services-for-isvs.aspx
48
Bandwidth: Network bandwidth is the most important component of
the model without which the model is an illiquid asset. In developing
countries, reliable bandwidth is still a concern.
Data: Global issues of privacy, ownership, security and discovery are
of concern. When the data moves, the provider must ensure alternate/old
copies are securely destroyed.
Security: Securing data is fundamental when using external network
resources such as the internet. Once the data is secure, limiting access via
identity management is critical but may require integration creating a point
of vulnerability
. Resource and Skillset
The article "Developing Talent for the Software Product Business ",
published in November 2008 by NASSCOM Research, states "While India has
a significant installed base of release management expertise in the area of
IT services, these professionals do not have experience in managing product
launches and releases, managing subsequent product releases, patches,
updates, platform interoperability, etc." It further adds "While a portion of
the talent is working in development, quality assurance and support
functions, a small number is getting involved in the product concept and
design phases
In the figure 22, Booz Allen Hamilton clearly indicates the lack of
maturity in product development. For decades the strength of Indian IT
industry and its workforce has been on one-off custom development
projects. With Platform offerings coming into the spotlight, it would be a
3 NASSCOM Research -http://blog.nasscom.in/nasscomnewsline/2008/11/developing-talent-for-the-
software-oroduct-business/
49
challenge to use the same workforce for designing and delivering. It would
actually lead to a problem of multi-instancing of the product/Software as
opposed to ideal multi-tenanting of the platform and hence can be a big
challenge if not acknowledged and addressed early on.
LOW HIGH
ProductDevelopment
Engineeing design
R&D
o Product testing
Manufacturing
* Tradional focus onmovig blue collarjobs to low costlocations
Sales &Marketing
Market research
Telesales supportTelemarketing
Credit card processing' Claims processing* Loan processinga Transaction processing* Loyalty programs
CustomerService
* E-mail response
o Cal centre(inbound; Outbound)
Finance andAccounting
* Accounting transactions,management
* General ledger accountingBillingFinancial analys
Risk analysis
Infor-mationTechnology
* Custom software developmentPackage implementation
* Application maintenanceEnhancements
* Conversions
Figure 22: Level of Offshore Service Maturity
In order to meet the business imperatives shown in figure 23,
companies must contend with several key challenges in managing their
platform conceptualization, design, and development programs.
. Developing platforms: Evolving towards platform that can form the basis
for multiple products lines while fueling innovation with partners
* Developing solutions concurrently: Re-focusing platform from being
product centric to being product and solution centric
50
* Effectively leveraging intellectual property (IP): Identifying, capturing,
protecting, and using IP from internal and external sources, maximizing
re-use and re-deployment of existing artifacts
* Managing Platform development costs: Managing the cost and
complexities, both within and outside company borders.
Reuc prduteelpmn cyl-ime improetm-omre
Manage the cost of product operations, for both new and mature product lines
Figure 23: Key Imperative for Product Development
The table 2 lists down that the characteristics of working for IT Service
engagement and platform development, is very different.
Table 2: Difference between LT. Service & PlatformCharacteristics
Development
51
Operating IT Service Platform Development
Characteristics
Scope and Very Defined, Individual Partnering for entire
Ownership outsourced, done products, virtually every
opportunistically, no
responsibility outside of the
contracted delivery code or
component
aspect of development.
Goals aligned to overall
platform/product success in
the marketplace.
Pricing Model Rate times house based on Fixed recurring cost based
skillset requirements and on estimated efforts.
estimate duration of Marketing, Sales, Customer
involvements, No other Development and
payments are made Relationship, Operations
Cost involved
Risk Sharing None, Customer bears Total Risk
almost the entire risk
IP Contribution Core/component design Code/component, deign
deliverable become IP of deliverable become IP.
the customer
Partner Driven Software engineering Besides Software, it
Product process only involves, market research
operations marketing, sales,
operations etc.
As discussed above, the Indian IT Service companies do not have the
required skillset. They would need to acquire both the resources and
operating model. With already a dearth of technical talent available in India,
the companies should make sure to adapt their training program. Changing
the mind set of existing employees, who have been ingrained working as an
IT Service provider should be a bigger challenge.
52
The current sales and marketing processes for the IT companies are
more geared towards large companies, mainly targeting Fortune3 4 500
companies, while the expected customer base for Business Service Platform,
the Small and Medium Enterprise would be outside this list. The companies
target multi-million dollar revenue from large customers. The expected
average revenue from customers on Business Service Platform is expected
to be much lower but in order to make profit, the customer would be large.
The current sales force is inclined to work with large customers and
they would need to be trained to successfully close deals with new customer
type.
The Indian IT companies have billions of dollars in the balance sheet
and are waiting for the right investment opportunity. In case they decide to
create a Business Platform, they should look to acquire small product
companies that have niche product that matches their platform needs. The
product company would provide talent more conversant in working in the
product/platform development environment, while their product can be used
in quickly developing the platform.
The other option would be to build partnership or create a joint
venture with medium sized product companies. While the revenue upside
would have to be shared, the challenges and risk would also decrease
considerably. Both the companies can use their expertise and create a
platform. Moreover, brand value of both the company would help in
marketing the product, helping get in more customers initially. Early
acquisition of customer would help validate the solution, attract other
customers helping share the high initial investment and improve operating
margins.
34 Fortune Magazine http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/
53
Chapter 7: Future Roadmap
Cloud computing has the ability to disrupt the market dynamics, for
both the customer and for the IT Service provider. It provides an
opportunity to Indian IT-BPO companies to utilize this technological
breakthrough to emerge as leaders and cast away their role of playing catch
up. They can lead and define the future landscape, instead waiting and
watch for the industry to evolve.
Amazon3 5 , Salesforce.com and Google 36 are the world leaders and the
gold standards in cloud computing today, in terms of both coverage and
impact on businesses worldwide. They have been at the forefront of cloud
computing by disrupting and catering to business and consumer demands, in
order to stay ahead of the game.
Indian IT-BPO companies do not need to cover the entire spectrum of
the cloud offering. They need to utilize their core skills, which have brought
them success along with their ability to develop software, provide
standardization, quality control and domain expertise. They should focus
their investment in the area of SaaS and Cloud Services.
Indian IT-BPO companies should form partnerships for cloud
components that they do not pursue, making sure their partners are reliable
and in for a long run and do not become a point of failure.
The companies should ensure ease of migration for customers. There
should be minimum effort to migrate from client's platform to the vendor's
business platform, by providing scalable, standard technology to support the
majority of the client's requirements with minimal customization.
3s Amazon Web Services http://aws.amazon.com/36 Google Apps for Business -http)://www.aooale.com/aos/intl/en/business/index.html
54
Processes should be standard across business verticals. It will help
attract customers while also keeping the cost of maintenance and service to
the minimal level. Business continuity and a failure-over prevention
mechanism should be in place along with enhanced levels of data security.
The effort should be to ensure long-term contracts with
outcome/output based pricing which beneficial to clients and vendors. The
one-time cost in creating the business service platform is high as it includes
initial setup cost, data migration cost and in many cases infrastructure
setup. Long-term contracts will help the company to amortize the expense
over the deal period, while the client can expect productivity gains over the
lifetime of the contract. Moreover, the company should spread their
investments across multiple customers, enabling them to share financial
benefits by reducing operating costs, thereby cutting capital expenditures.
55
Appendix A: Quarterly Revenue and Employee Details
The table 3 details the employee count and quarterly revenue for
Infosys3 7 , Tata Consulting Services (TCS) 38 and Wipro39.
Table 3: Employee and Quarterly Revenue Details
Infosys TCS Wi roS Quarter Employee Revenue Employee Revenue Employee Revenue
No Ending (in $) (in $) (in $)1 31-Dec-11 145,100 1,806 226,751 2,586 136,734 1,5052 30-Sep-11 141,800 1,746 214,770 2 131,730 14723 30-Jun-11 133,600 1,671 202,190 2,412 126,490 1,4084 31-Mar-11 130,820 1,602 198,614 2,244 122,385 1,4005 31-Dec-10 127,779 1,585 186,914 2,144 119,491 1,3446 30-Sep-10 122,468 1,496 174,417 2,004 115,900 1,2737 30-Jun-10 114,822 1,358 163,700 1,794 112,925 1,2188 31-Mar-10 113,796 1,296 160,429 1686 108,071 1,1809 31-Dec-09 109,000 1,232 149,654 1,635 102,746 1,127
10 30-Sep-09 105,000 1,154 141,962 1,538 97,891 1,06511 30-Jun-09 103,000 1,122 141,642 1,480 98,521 1,03312 31-Mar-09 104,850 1,121 143,761 1,434 97,810 1,05813 31-Dec-08 103,078 1,171 130,343 1,483 96,965 1,03914 30-Sep-08 100,306 1,216 121,610 1,574 97,552 1,02315 30-Jun-08 94,379 1,155 116,308 1,525 95,675 1,03916 31-Mar-08 91,187 1,142 111,407 1,516 82,122 95617 31-Dec-07 88,601 1,084 108,229 1,484 79,832 83718 30-Sep-07 80,501 1,022 104,199 1,372 77,478 81619 30-Jun-07 75,971 928 94,931 1,262 72,137 72520 31-Mar-07 72,241 863 89,419 1,200 67,818 706
37 SEC Filling from Infosys http://www.nasdaq.com/symbol/infy/sec-filings38 TCS Quarterly Reporthttp://www.tcs.com/investors/financial info/quarterly/Pages/default.aspx3 SEC Filings from Wipro http://www.nasdag.com/symbol/wit/sec-filingqs
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Appendix B: TCS Current Offerings
"IT-as-a-Service" is the TCS way of serving SMBs through cloud. In
the "IT-as-a-Service" model, it delivers on-demand business capability with
an integrated suite of hardware, network and software solutions. It also
includes the required business, technical and consulting services for SMBs.
The services are provided in a "build-as-you-grow", "pay-as-you use" model
through a combination of on premise and shared services hosted platforms.
Through this, TCS provides a "One Stop Shop" for all SMB needs and
removes the pain of running a highly complex internal IT departments and
dealing with a large number of local vendors. It also understand SMB's
constraints with IT related budget and therefore provide a "build as you
grow" model, which gives the subscriber flexibility in IT investment. The
"pay-as-you-use" option provides SMBs the choice of scaling up, when their
business grows. This gives them comfort of low capital investment.
TCS solutions consist of seven layers of fully integrated services.
. In Layer 1, it provides all the necessary on premise hardware needed to
run the enterprise. It includes equipment such as desktop, laptops hand-
held devices and more. These devices are employed at the customer
premises to access the solutions that TCS provides.
" In Layer 2, it sets up the required networks to connect with its data
center. Based on the bandwidth needed, it provides network connections
in partnership with its network providers.
. In Layer 3, it delivers all the office solutions relevant to SMBs. This will
include document management, email, collaboration suite and other office
software.
57
* In Layer 4, it addresses the business needs. This includes Finance and
Accounting, CRM, HR management and payroll.
* Until Layer 4, all its solutions are predominantly vertical or domain
agnostic.
* In Layer 5, it addresses the core industry specific needs. For example, in
the Manufacturing industry, its solutions will include Material, Sales,
Stock, Production and other needs, while Retail will include Point of Sales,
Warehouse, Store Inventory and related aspects.
* In Layer 6, it addresses niche vertical application requirements such as
space management, loyalty management and analytics.
. In Layer 7, it provides necessary BPO and consulting services.
The solutions are available in three editions, depending upon the
requirements for user base, and the functionality: Standard, Premium and
Elite.
Customers can subscribe for one of the three editions based on their
business needs.
58
Appendix C: Infosys Current Offerings
Infosys positions itself as a cloud ecosystem integrator by providing
comprehensive service for the cloud through industry leading services and
ecosystem partnership. Infosys divides its cloud offering into two categories
* Services for the Cloud
" Services in the Cloud
"Services for the Cloud" addresses various aspects of Cloud adoption.
It provides companies with business agility while reducing total cost of
ownership. The service includes
" Cloud Strategy and Adoption: Assesses "Cloud readiness" quotient with
Infosys' Cloud advisory services and draws up a Cloud adoption roadmap,
estimate Return on Investment, and define a customized business service
catalogue with deployment options based on customer needs.
. Cloud Builder: Helps build a robust and secure private or service provider
Cloud, through standard processes to deliver infrastructure and
application Platform-as-a-service.
. Cloud Services Aggregation and Migration: Creates customized business
services catalogue for customer by using Infosys' Cloud services
aggregation services. It includes installation, customization,
management, and closure. These services are 'Cloud-enabled' with
required data migration, application migration, application remediation,
and user experience services.
" Cloud Services Orchestrator: Orchestrate and Integrate Cloud services
with enterprise assets by making use of best-in-class solutions that are
available across the Cloud ecosystem.
59
* Cloud Applications Builder: Create native Cloud services involving
collaborative and ubiquitous services using Infosys' SPEED Cloud factory
helping gain competitive business advantage, through sustained
innovation.
- Cloud Sustenance Services: Manage Cloud governance and Cloud QoS
efficiently by using Infosys' Cloud sustenance services.
"Services in the Cloud" is delivered as Infosys Edge Business Platforms
in the Cloud creating three kinds of platforms, namely
Functional platform for the sales and marketing needs of clients
includes Infosys SocialEdge, Infosys CommerceEdge, etc. The platform for
smarter organizations includes TalentEdge, Source-to-Pay etc.
Vertical platforms addresses specific industry segment needs such as
banking, retail, manufacturing, telecommunication, health, etc.
Bridge platforms niche industries that exist at the confluence of the
verticals. For example, an insurance product for the health traveler cuts
across health, airline, hospitality, insurance and banking industries.
Their banking solution, Finacle LiteTM is a solution on a private cloud
environment, tailored to address the core banking, e-banking and mobile
banking requirements of co-operative banks, community banks and credit
unions worldwide.
60
Appendix D: Wipro's Current Offerings
Wipro helps organization migrate existing applications to the cloud or
consume cloud services from multiple public cloud service providers and
consolidate internally through private clouds4 0 . Wipro helps clients achieve
this through-
* Strategy Consulting Services: Help customers integrate cloud services
into their IT portfolio across public, private and hybrid cloud
environments.
* System Integration Services: Design, build, deploy and manage cloud
computing environments - right from implementing on-premise private
cloud for customers to implementing packaged product SaaS offerings.
. Engineering Services: Reengineer ISV packaged product to be delivered
as a SaaS offering, hosting the SaaS offering in Wipro data centers.
* Application Development Services: Application development, testing and
management services for public cloud platforms like Salesforce.com and
MS Dynamic CRM.
* Infrastructure Services: Aimed at designing, managing and monitoring of
public and private cloud environments and virtual desktop, infrastructure
advisory and collaboration services.
. Wipro branded Cloud solutions: Industry specific solutions which will be
delivered in the SaaS business model to their customers.
40 Wirpo Cloud Offerings - http://www.wipro.com/services/cloud-servicesl
61
The solutions and services extend across the various cloud layers -
from Business Process as a Service, Software as a Service, and Platform as a
Service to Infrastructure as a Service.
62
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